Just lazy language use from me here I think.
Waltzy
You assume I'm not?
For sure, all very emotive arguments morally I agree with the sentiment.
My rebuttal was to you ascribing psychopathy to the general public because they eat meat, I expect you'll see a much lower than average score for empathy across slaughterhouse workers ( and probably more psychopathy as well )
Tbh, it would be interesting to see what happened to meat consumption if we introduced laws mandating abattoir imagery on meat packaging.
I think the psychopathy here comes from the desire to commit this violence, the meat industry abstracts the violence away from the consumer, so I don't think the argument holds.
Which is to say vegetarianism would be more prevalent if the consumer had to hold the bolt gun themselves ( that and more people would become desensitized to this kind of animal cruelty )
I guess they wanted to only have to cut a hole in a single panel.
Aye, it doesn't really feel relevant. He was injured as a result of gunfire.
Just keep it in a mason jar or similar, anything airtight
While this is undoubtedly true, I think OPs post misses the point for a more depressing reason, people generally believe what they're told to believe, thinking about things is hard and most people are exhausted.
I also figured that they meant entangled with some system that can mark change, but change is only possible with a concept of time. So I still don't follow.
It's not all that different to a fax machine, the way it's described in st.
You just need to be able to accurately scan and place atoms to achieve the 'teleportation' being discussed here.
Thinking about it even that is probably not possible, as you'd need to know both the position and momentum and state of every sub atomic particle in the body.
Shame this magic cooling liquid is only effective with ai workloads /s